Course Revision Toward More Equitable Classrooms

by Michelle Liu


 

Congratulations! You’ve almost made it to the end of the quarter!

All your energy right now might be going towards supporting students in successfully finishing the quarter. If you’re reading this blog post and know that you don’t have the capacity to think about the near future right now, know that you can return to this blog post later when you are ready to start thinking about teaching next quarter.

The pause between quarters is so useful for thinking about what needs to be changed one quarter to the next, and what could change. For myself, I annotate my syllabus and assignments with a running list of things that need to change the next time I teach the course as a little gift to my future self so that the course will run more smoothly. 

What could change is often less obvious, since for me, these kinds of changes involve tinkering with things that are already working fine. But I know that each time I teach, I’ve learned something from my students. I get ideas about how to help them better engage with assigned material, what I can do to try to make the classroom community even stronger, and how to connect my course to the ever changing cultural shifts that shape the stakes of teaching and learning. 

The things that could change often relate to my taking a moment to think about the next quarter as yet another experiment with manifesting the vision of the PWR antiracist and accessibility praxis statement. What does it mean to do my part in a program that commits to “working together, with compassion and critical intention, to resist and transform normative systems within our university and program and to rebuild our teaching and learning communities to be more socially equitable, culturally sustaining, and just”? 

Luckily, I know that I don’t explore this question alone. Each of us decide what happens in our classroom, but I feel fortunate to be part of a program and department that encourages us to think together through these decisions. Over the summer, Eric Ames, the chair of Cinema and Media Studies, shared with me resources from his pedagogical toolbox. From him, I learned about the Eberly Center at Carnegie Mellon

While many universities, including our own, have teaching resources, the layout and presentation of resources and questions to think about at the Eberly Center website make particular sense to my brain. I particularly like their thoughtful presentation of “How to Center DEI in Teaching.” They too, like Gin Schwarz and Anselma Prihandita did in the SQ21 PWR workshops on assessment, see course design as built upon the triangle of learning objectives, assessments, and instructional activities. And each of these legs of the triangle are opportunities to make a course more inclusive to better build up intrinsic learning motivation in students. This building of a motivated classroom community to me feels so vital in reaching towards what a “socially equitable, culturally sustaining, and just” future could feel like.

What I find helpful about the Eberly Center’s layout of centering DEI in teaching is that they succinctly present the research that guides their advice along with concrete examples of what this research sounds like in the day-to-day of the classroom. In my conversations with Eric, both of us think that this site is helpful for newer and more experienced teachers alike. For myself in planning WQ 23 teaching, I’ve been thinking about deeper ways to bring “culturally responsive teaching” into my writing assignments so that students can see writing as the alchemic agent that transforms how they know and engage with difference. 

There are a lot of websites out there about teaching, so certainly, use the ones that make the most sense to how your brain operates. But if you are looking for one or looking for another that presents a different format from UW’s own Center for Teaching and Learning, you  might find a lot of worth out of the Eberly Center site. It’s teaching sites like these that remind why teaching is never boring—there is always something new to learn!

Multimodal Composing with Zines and Comedy Writing

By Kimberlee Gillis-Bridges, PWR 182 Faculty Mentor and Stephanie Kerschbaum, PWR Director

We wanted to take the opportunity to showcase two courses that provide significant opportunities for students to engage multimodal composing: Henry Christopher’s English 131 (Composition) course, which includes an assignment sequence centered on zine-making, and BrittNEY Frantece’s English 381 (Advanced Composition) course, which focused on comedy writing.

The syllabi, assignments, and select materials from these courses, which students have given permission to share, are available via Sharepoint when you log in with your UW NetID.

To put this blog post together, we spent some time with materials Henry and BrittNEY shared, then talked about what we found so exciting about Henry’s and BrittNEY’s courses. What follows is an edited version of our conversation.

Key takeaways and observations from Henry’s and BrittNEY’s syllabi and assignments

Kimberlee: Looking at these materials, I was excited by the way they help students get at the distinction between genre and mode that can be challenging in multimodal teaching and composing. 

Anytime you’re doing multimodality, students tend to conflate genre and mode. With these classes, you have the genre of the zine and the genre of comedy, and I think these two courses highlight how particular genres foreground or make available certain modes that people can work in, and thus invite students’ attention to the kinds of modes they want to use to make rhetorical appeals. This can mean, as in BrittNEY’s course, students can say, “well, I’m going to be doing comedy–how can I effectively engage in the modes the genre makes available?”

Stephanie: I want to pick up on this point in the context of Henry’s zine approach. The assignment asks students to create a zine, but zines have all kinds of other specific subtypes and there are many different approaches to zines and they’re made with all kinds of different materials. But at the same time, because students are creating a zine, that already means they have to deal with the constraints that come up around zine-making. 

For me, both Henry’s zine-making assignment sequence and BrittNEY’s comedy writing syllabus show the value of asking students to collectively work with a particular type of multimodal performance or text and to explore the possibilities within that space.

Kimberlee: I agree, and I think another thing that’s really useful about looking at these models is that combination of direction and challenges.

I noticed particularly in BrittNEY’s class that the first few weeks were all about building community in the classroom, building a space that would feel safe for students to perform in and take different kinds of risks. To me that is a huge feature of this course. The other piece of scaffolding that she shared with us is the assignment where students made a counter argument in the genre that the source argument was done in to think about what argument means in different genres.

This assignment takes me back to the question of how you use the modal affordances that genres privilege to create your counter argument. It also feeds into the class’s focus on comedy because so much about comedy has to do with critique or counter argument–or it can, depending on the type of comedy you like. So I think the assignment involves students not only in thinking about genre and mode together and working in modes that may not be familiar to them, but also in the larger question, “What do I want my comedy to be about and how would I put it together?”

Stephanie: Yes! And, you know, in Henry’s zine assignment sequence–the second major project of the course–the first short assignment involves groups of students working together to design a masthead for their zine, a place where potential submitters might go to learn about the zine and what kind of submissions the zine is looking for. Based on the mastheads, members of the class submit rough drafts to populate each others’ zines as their second short assignment in the sequence, submitting to each other while also fielding drafts from classmates. This is such an inventive way to design a meaningful publishing opportunity.

Kimberlee: Yeah, and when you have them submitting to each other, you have the stakes of trying to understand, “well what exactly is the vision for this publication I’m submitting to?” Also, on the other side of it, “what is my editorial vision,” and assessing how particular submissions fit within that vision and requesting revisions to better connect the piece to both editorial vision and publication space.

While I’m at it, let me also raise two more connections between these projects. One is a “DIY” quality in terms of asking students to tap into individual investments, passions, and experiences. The second is the way they both engage with spatial rhetorics and modes in different ways. 

Zines invite students to engage the space on the page, how text and images are arranged together, and with physical zines in particular you often have people wrestling with spatiality and materiality of paper and how it folds, so the page becomes this interactive thing.

The comedy performance also picks up on those gestural modes and tactility of space and performance. These can include interactivity with the audience, bodily movements, and speech and pacing. Students can, perhaps, ask things such as, “where do I put my pauses? How long are those pauses? When am I delivering information rapidfire so that the spaces between chunks of information are faster-paced?” These spatial rhetorics invite attention to modes on a page, on a website, maybe in a room, and consideration of how space interacts with time.

Student agency and composer identity

Stephanie: We talk a lot in PWR about students making their own composing choices and being able to communicate about them and build metacognition about those choices, as our course outcomes indicate, such as the first outcome which includes the bullet point, “assessing and articulating the rationale for and effects of composing choices.” 

One of the things I admire so much about both of these courses is how they do a lot of work to give students support, knowledge, and community that all enable students to navigate this kind of choice-making while at the same time offering some boundaries. The courses define the kind of composing students are going to do while leaving a lot of space for the composing process to be incredibly creative, adaptive, and generative.

Sometimes what happens when students get an assignment that leaves the question of genre and modality open, it can be overwhelming. And students have to wrestle, sometimes in unproductive or frustrating ways, with how to build on prior knowledge to select from potential composing choices. I learned that the hard way. (laughs)

Kimberlee: We all learned that the hard way! (laughing)

Stephanie: It’s a balance that we have to strike: students need to activate prior knowledges to identify and work with composing choices, but if they don’t already have some of those prior knowledges, which can include things like knowing how to use a particular technology or software or having access to particular kinds of materials and resources, then we have to ask ourselves how they are given opportunities to build that knowledge in our courses. 

Kimberlee: Yes, it’s that idea of supporting and foregrounding students’ agency while giving them the tools to enact that agency by actively putting a text together.

You know, this brings up another point: these are two different levels of classes, too, one in which you have students who are probably further along in their university careers taking BrittNEY’s 381 course, and who may feel more agency than the first and second year students taking Henry’s 131. 

What I found really interesting about BrittNEY’s 300-level class and the comedy show is that idea of pulling people into a genre that they may not have done before. The students perhaps have never thought of themselves as performers. But we all have to perform in public in all kinds of ways. We all find ourselves needing to capture people’s attention through those modes that unfold in physical space, or that are projected out over digital space, and I think that this class can help students recognize this kind of agency in building skills and learning to do things that they may not have thought that they could do before.

Stephanie: Yes! I think this speaks to the question of wanting students to be comfortable and encouraging them to explore projects that they may not already think are in their wheelhouse. Sometimes you have a student you just want to say, “Yes! Go do the thing!” and you just let them loose with their ideas, but other times you want to nudge a student into building capacities and skills that they aren’t already comfortable with but which they can build familiarity and comfort with over time. 

Kimberlee: We talk about writing as a process of discovery. Maybe we can describe multimodal composing as a process of discovering an investment in something that you didn’t think you cared about before.

Stephanie: I love that, multimodal composing as a process of discovery!

Kimberlee: Yeah, it specifically brings to mind a conversation I had with a first-year student yesterday who is probably like the students in Henry’s 131 course. A lot of first-year students are carrying narratives of their identities as writers that came from previous contexts, and those externally projected identities can be doing all kinds of work–both positive and negative. A lot of students’ self-perceptions of who they are as writers developed around essays –or speeches, or Powerpoint presentations, or whatever– but mostly a fairly narrow set of textual production. 

I wonder how changing up the kinds of textual production that we’re asking students to engage in can help disrupt those writerly narratives they carry  and potentially open up a much richer relationship to writing. The ways that PWR courses like Henry’s and BrittNEY’s engage students in genres produced broadly across different kinds of spaces is really valuable to helping them  develop new senses of themselves as composers.

On assessing multimodal projects

Kimberlee: It’s important to take up the question of assessment as we conceptualize multimodal projects in our courses. For instance, in these two cases we see that there’s a way students need to perform or produce the project, but then there’s also documenting that needs to happen for grading purposes. 

If you’re doing a comedy show, for example, it’s a time-based medium, and the time goes by quickly. In these cases, I want to consider how a performance unfolded in actual time. So when I grade, one approach might be for me to say,  “Okay, it’s a time based medium, so the student is going to have to think about the comedy performance, and they’re going to have to put in pauses, and they’re going to have to organize their materials in ways that there are certain sort of peaks and valleys. I want to be able to take in the moments that the person really wants to get across in real time, and I consider real time in my assessment, because that’s how I would take in the genre.”

But part of what I also want my assessment to be doing is giving feedback on uses of the modal affordances. Hence, one option might be recording a performance that happens in physical or virtual space. That way, I can rewind. In this case, then, I might use my assessment to talk about a certain timestamp and say, “Okay, here’s where you effectively use pacing shifts.” Doing this means that my assessment time is almost always longer than the performance time.

Stephanie: To add to what you’re saying, Kimberlee, about considerations for grading that might affect the design of the assignment itself and how it is submitted and shared, we can think about how recording apparatuses–whether a video camera in the classroom, someone’s cell phone, or a zoom recording that’s turned on–all have different ways of capturing a scene that participate in the meaning-making process.

Kimberlee: Yeah, and then the question of where student creations live is a really good one. Often the creations may have to live in several places in order for us to assess them. For instance, there can be zines that people have made in a physical form, but then they have to scan them or convert them somehow to a digital form in order to be graded on Canvas. 

 

Campus “Field Trips:” Ways to bring students and their writing out of the classroom!

by Molly Porter

You might assume that jaded college students are beyond the days of field trips, but think again! UW’s campus is full of ample opportunities for engagement beyond the classroom. Consider getting your students to learn more immersively with: 

  • The Indigenous Walking Tour: This beautifully-narrated, student-created tour has so many great resources for understanding the environmental, political, and rhetorical histories of what is now UW campus. You might visit stops as a class if convenient,. or have students go and reflect on their own/ in pairs. 
    • Before I even knew about this tour, I enjoyed taking students to the Medicinal Herb Garden, Stop 5 on the tour. It’s a great place for students to sit and practice observation/ description, which worked well for my nature study journals. 
    • wǝɫǝbʔaltxʷ, or the Intellectual House, stop 2 on the tour, has staff happy to talk to students about the space and Coast Salish history if you call and give them a heads up! I’ve learned a lot from them both on my own and with a planned student group. 
    • One nugget of indigenous history I’ll add here (that is not on the tour) is the Denny Hall Clock! Still running from 1904, this mysterious artifact features an old photograph of Kikisoblu/ Princess Angeline, Chief Seattle’s daughter—perhaps an opportunity to think about kairos?
    • The tour booklet is also a very cool multimodal composition in and of itself, and I’ve enjoyed discussing its use of tense and person with students. 
  • The Brockman Memorial Tree Tour: especially for place-based or environmental classes, this website serves as a guide to learn more about the trees in our evergreen state!
    • This can be an independent resource OR you can schedule a tour for your class here!
    • You might use this as an opportunity to discuss indigenous vs invasive species, and the idea of “pure” or “natural” environments and the people who steward them—most trees at UW are not indigenous to our area! Is this good or bad?
    • I’ve also enjoyed pairing this with Aimee Nezhukumatathil’s opening “Catalpa Tree” chapter from World of Wonders, which discusses campus trees and racial identity.
    • Side note: my favorite tree on the tour is the strange Monkey Puzzle in front of Denny!
  • UW Libraries
    • Special Collections: Schedule an appointment for your class to see rare books and learn about print culture history. You can contact them here to set up a time to visit their classroom!
      • This can work especially well for 111 classes, where you can look at special editions of classic and obscure works of literature you may be studying, like a signed first edition of The Little Prince!
      • But it also works for talking about multimodality in 182, 131 and beyond ! There’s a 19th century animal book that actually makes barnyard noises somehow!! They’ve also shown my students some really cool pop-up books and even a literal pillow-book (pages sown into a pillow). 
      • Their current exhibit on Invisible Cities until March 2022 could be a good resource for place-based/ urban environment classes.
  • The Burke Museum: free to all students, WA’s oldest museum features immersive archaeological and paleontology, including literal windows in to the musum preservation process. 
    • I’ve had some of my students come here for the research phase of nature study writing projects in my place-based writing class.
    • Some teachers have also found it useful to analyze the Burke museum as a text: how is it organized? What are the stakes? Who’s the audience? The speaker? 
  • The Henry Museum: also free to all students, and the only museum devoted to contemporary art in our region! Here’s a link to current exhibitions. 
    •  Students can analyze the multimodal/ visual arguments at play here and journal about the space.
    • Also, the café in the basement has the cheapest coffee on campus!
    • The Frye Museum is another great free art museum I’ve taken students to for a summer class, but that’s a bit trickier in a 2-hour time block. 
  • You may consider getting students to independently write “scene” observations or rhetorical analyses for signs around UDistrict and other neighborhoods. Where do they find rhetorical appeals in their daily walks? How can they practice analysis and community engagement in attending performances on/ off campus? 



Thanks for listening to me nerd out! What field trip ideas do y’all have to share? 

Strategies for Formative Assessment

Last Spring the PWR ran an awesome workshop on equity-oriented assessment (check out the vlog recap here). One important thing Gin and Anselma brought up in that workshop is the idea that grading is not the only form of assessment. Summative assessment is when we give students final grades or grades and feedforward on written assignments. In these instances, we are making a judgment or evaluation about the ways students are demonstrating the content we’re trying to teach them. Formative assessment is more of a reciprocal process where we check in with students about their progress and comprehension as we go. Formative assessment is an important part of equity oriented assessment because it allows us to meet students where they are and helps give students the language and space to articulate their needs. 

 

If you and I have talked even passingly about teaching, there are two things you’ve probably heard me say about my teaching: 1) that I aim to be as transparent as possible with my students about my teaching goals and how I hope to achieve them and 2) that I see teaching as an ongoing process of learning and unlearning. I believe that teaching should be dynamic and mutable in order to reach our students’ diverse and ever-changing needs. This is why I think formative assessment is so important; because it allows us to check in with students to get a better sense of their learning needs and how our material is being received. From there, we can tweak our material and approach to meet each specific class’s needs.

 

If we’re thinking about the university writing classroom as a genre, how can we effectively teach students to navigate this genre? Toward this end, you may want to incorporate some form of formative assessment when introducing prompts, when students receive feedforward from you or their peers, or when assigning particularly dense or long readings. These activities are also important to developing a shared vocabulary of assessment. What language do you want to give students and what language are they already using effectively? 

 

This means that formative assessment and how it (re)shapes our class planning will look different for each instructor and each group of students. Still, there are a few tried and true activities that I constantly depend on and would like to share with you. 

  • Clear & fuzzy: there are various different ways to implement this one, but the general idea is the same: students name one thing about a lecture/prompt/activity/class session that is really clear to them. And one thing that they’re still fuzzy on and could use some clarity. You could do this as a quick write that you collect, a pair and share activity, or any other format that makes sense for your purposes. 
  • Ticket out the door: at the end of a class session you ask students to do some sort of reflection about the day’s work, which they turn in to you as their ticket to leave class for the day. This is especially useful on those days you wrap up early. 
  • Finger scales: ask students to use their hands to show you on a scale of 1-5 how they feel about their comprehension of a concept or reading. 1 being not super confident and would like some to spend some more time thinking/talking through as a class and 5 being very comfortable in their knowledge and ready to move on. 
  • Co-writing rubrics: Once you’ve introduced a prompt, it can be useful to ask students to co-write or revise an existing rubric from that assignment. That way you can ensure all of you are on the same page when it comes to the summative assessment you will give and the way they will read and workshop their peers’ work.
  • Formative assessment is built into most of our PWR classes. Things like writer’s memos and conferences give instructors the opportunity to check in with their students about things that may apply to that particular student, assignment, unit, or sequence.

 

How do you go about formative assessment in your classes? How do those ideas differ from or build upon the work you do with summative assessment?

Episode One of Compendium’s Companion Podcast!

Hi Everyone! Welcome to the first episode of Compendium’s companion podcast. In this episode, myself, Missy Gonzalez-Garduno, and a handful of other instructors, Jacob Wilson, Micaela Chavez, and Angel Garduno, got together for a roundtable discussion. We talked about the various challenges we’ve faced in the last few years of teaching, the importance of building teaching community, and the resources that have been the most useful for us as we’ve built on our current materials and/or transitioned to new courses. We had a great time recording this podcast and we hope you enjoy it too!

A transcript of this episode can be found here.